Bravo Company
An Afghanistan Deployment and Its Aftermath
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
A timely, powerful, and sweeping portrait of a company of men who went to war in Afghanistan, their troubled deployment, and their lives since returning home
“An honest account of bravery, sacrifice, and what it means to seek redemption. As a veteran of combat himself, Ben Kesling is able to intimately and honestly document war and its aftermath in ways others haven’t.” —Jake Tapper, CNN anchor
In Bravo Company, journalist and veteran Ben Kesling tells the story of the war in Afghanistan through the eyes of the men of one unit, part of a combat-hardened parachute infantry regiment in the 82nd Airborne Division. A decade ago, the soldiers of Bravo Company deployed to Afghanistan for a tour in Kandahar’s notorious Arghandab Valley. By the time they made it home, three soldiers had been killed in action, a dozen more had lost limbs, and nearly half of the company had Purple Hearts.
In the decade since, two of the soldiers have died by suicide, more than a dozen have tried, and others admit they’ve considered it. Declared an “extraordinary risk” by the Department of Veterans Affairs, the members of Bravo Company were chosen as test subjects for a new approach to the veteran crisis, focusing less on individuals and more on the group.
Bravo Company has an insider’s eye and ear, and draws on extensive interviews and original reporting. It follows the men from their initial enlistment and training, through their deployment and a major shift in their mission, and then on to what has happened in the decade since as they returned to combat in other units or moved on with their lives as civilians, or struggled to do so. This is a powerful, insightful, and memorable account of a war that didn’t end for these soldiers just because they came home.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Journalist and Marine Corps veteran Kesling's gut-wrenching debut documents the physical and psychological tolls of the war in Afghanistan through the story of one U.S. Army unit's deployment. In 2009, the 82nd Airborne's Bravo Company went to Afghanistan's Arghandab Valley to conduct foot patrols against the Taliban. Kesling draws empathetic yet incisive profiles of the unit's officers and grunts, many of whom enlisted after the 9/11 attacks: "It's a simple truth that men who go to war want an orgasm of violence for the sake of violence itself," he writes. "Don't let them tell you any different." Setting up their combat outpost in a radish field, Bravo Company began patrolling in December 2009 and sustained its first fatality from a Taliban IED the day after Christmas. Kesling conveys the visceral horror of such deaths ("With an IED it's not dust to dust. It's to pink mist, the result of a violent and horrible cancellation of a person's parts and pieces") and their long-term effects: three soldiers dead, dozens with life-altering dismemberments, two suicides, and dozens of attempted suicides. He also reports on the soldiers' difficult reintegration into civilian life, the unique challenges of traumatic brain injuries, and the 2019 launch of Operation Resiliency, a program that organizes unit reunions with an explicit focus on mental well-being. Devastating yet cautiously hopeful, this is an essential study of combat trauma.
Customer Reviews
Bravo Company
Thank you Mr Ben Kesling for telling what these men and others like them have gone through and continue to go through. Trying to get back to living a normal life whatever that may be.